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Be among the first to experience 1,400+ board-style MCQ questions, detailed explanations, and flexible study modes designed specifically for rheumatology professionals, hosted on qbank.com.
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Comprehensive question bank aligned with ABIM Rheumatology blueprint, featuring detailed explanations for both correct and incorrect answer options, references, and select questions with diagrams and tables.
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Real board-style clinical vignettes with detailed explanations
A 50-year-old man presents with severe pain, redness, and swelling of his right great toe that began abruptly two days ago. He describes the pain as excruciating (9/10), noting it woke him from sleep and that even the weight of a bedsheet is intolerable. He denies preceding trauma, fever, or similar past episodes.
His past medical history is notable for stage 2 chronic kidney disease with a baseline creatinine of 1.4 mg/dL (eGFR ~65 mL/min/1.73m²). He has no hypertension, diabetes, or cardiovascular disease. He takes no regular medications and does not use diuretics. He drinks 1-2 beers per week. There is no family history of gout or kidney stones.
Physical examination reveals an afebrile man in moderate distress. Vital signs are stable. There is marked erythema, warmth, swelling, and exquisite tenderness over the right first metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joint without overlying skin breakdown. No other joints are involved, and no tophi are present.
Laboratory studies:
Synovial fluid analysis shows a leukocyte count of 18,000/µL with neutrophilic predominance. Microscopy reveals needle-shaped, negatively birefringent monosodium urate crystals.
He is treated with colchicine, and his symptoms resolve over the next week. He returns to discuss long-term management.
According to the 2020 American College of Rheumatology (ACR) guidelines, what is the recommendation regarding initiation of urate-lowering therapy (ULT) for this patient after his first gout flare has resolved?
This question tests your ability to apply ACR guidelines for initiating urate-lowering therapy in a patient with gout and chronic kidney disease after a first flare.
This choice is incorrect because, while a serum urate above 9 mg/dL is a key risk factor for recurrent gout, the 2020 ACR guidelines do not issue a strong recommendation for universal ULT initiation after a first flare in such patients. Instead, the guidelines emphasize a conditional recommendation, reflecting the need for individualized, shared decision-making that weighs the risks and benefits of lifelong therapy.
This is the correct answer because the 2020 ACR guidelines specifically provide a conditional recommendation to consider ULT after a first gout flare in patients with certain high-risk features, including a serum urate greater than 9 mg/dL, stage 3 or worse CKD, or urolithiasis. In this case, the patient's uric acid is 9.5 mg/dL, which meets the threshold for increased risk of recurrence and complications. However, the recommendation remains conditional to allow for shared decision-making.
This choice is incorrect because the conditional recommendation against ULT after a first flare applies only to patients without high-risk features such as marked hyperuricemia, advanced CKD, or nephrolithiasis. Since this patient's uric acid exceeds 9 mg/dL, he falls into the group for whom ULT may be considered even after a single episode.
This answer is incorrect because the guidelines do not issue a strong recommendation against ULT in this scenario; rather, they highlight the importance of individualized care when high-risk features are present. The decision to initiate ULT should be made collaboratively, considering both clinical risk and patient preference.
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Most rheumatology question banks offer 400–700 questions. RheumWorld gives you 1,400+ — the largest dedicated rheumatology question bank available — at a price that makes sense.
| What you get | Typical QBank | RheumWorld |
|---|---|---|
| Board-style MCQ questions | 400–700 | 1,400+ |
| 6-month price | $299–$649 | $499 (2–3x the questions) |
| Cost per question (6-mo) | $0.75–$0.91 | ~$0.36 |
Comparison reflects publicly available information about rheumatology question banks as of early 2026. Pricing and features may vary.
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